Luxor to Aswan Private Day Trip — Edfu Temple & Kom Ombo
Overview
Between Luxor and Aswan, the Nile passes two of the most impressive Ptolemaic temples in Egypt — the Temple of Horus at Edfu (the best-preserved ancient Egyptian temple in the country, its original stone roof still intact over the entire complex) and the Temple of Kom Ombo (uniquely dedicated to two gods simultaneously — Sobek the crocodile and Haroeris the hawk — its perfectly symmetrical double plan visible from the first pylon). Nile cruise ships stop at both; but visitors staying in Luxor who are not on a cruise can access both on this private day trip — driving south from Luxor through the Upper Egyptian countryside, visiting the temples in the morning and early afternoon, and continuing to Aswan or returning to Luxor by evening.
Edfu — The Temple of Horus
The Temple of Horus at Edfu is the most completely preserved ancient Egyptian temple in the world — the massive stone roof that once covered most of the temple is still in place over the hypostyle hall and the inner sanctuary, making Edfu the only major temple where you can experience the interior as the ancient Egyptians did: dark, mysterious, the light entering only through high clerestory openings, the air thick with the smell of old stone. Built between 237 and 57 BC (the construction timeline is inscribed on the walls in a detail unparalleled in any other Egyptian temple), Edfu's dedication to Horus — the hawk-headed son of Osiris, divine embodiment of the living pharaoh — makes it a theological companion to the Osiris mysteries at Abydos.
The approach from the town is by traditional horse-drawn carriage — a 5-minute ride that contributes to the sense of arrival at something extraordinary. The first pylon stands 36 metres high. The granite cult statue of Horus as a falcon wearing the double crown stands 3.45 metres high in the court before the hypostyle hall — one of the most photographed ancient Egyptian statues after those at Abu Simbel and the Colossi of Memnon. Inside, the Festival of the Beautiful Meeting reliefs record the annual Nile journey of the goddess Hathor from her temple at Dendera to Edfu for her reunion with Horus — the same Hathor reunion festival described in our Ancient Egyptian Festivals guide.
Entrance: ~600 EGP (included) · Horse carriage to temple: included
Kom Ombo — The Double Temple
The Temple of Kom Ombo is Egypt's strangest temple — a perfectly symmetrical double temple in which every element is duplicated: two entrances, two hypostyle halls, two inner sanctuaries, two sets of reliefs, two theologies running side by side for the length of the entire building. The left (eastern) side was dedicated to Sobek, the crocodile god of fertility and the Nile; the right (western) side to Haroeris (Horus the Elder), the hawk-headed god of the sky. The sacred crocodiles of Sobek were kept in the sacred lake here and fed ceremonially; after death they were mummified and wrapped — the Kom Ombo Crocodile Museum (in a converted chapel of the temple) displays 22 mummified crocodiles in various states of preservation, from complete adults to infant specimens.
The temple sits directly on the Nile bank — the most dramatically positioned of any temple on the Nile cruise route — and the view from the Nile (or from the temple terrace looking back at the river) is one of the finest in Upper Egypt. The reliefs on the outer walls of the temple include a famous representation of ancient medical instruments — forceps, scalpels, and other surgical tools that attest to the sophisticated medical practice conducted at this temple in antiquity.
| Temple | Distance from Luxor | Entry Fee | Key Feature |
|---|---|---|---|
| Edfu — Temple of Horus | ~115 km south (2 hrs) | ~600 EGP — included | Best-preserved temple in Egypt · intact stone roof · granite Horus falcon statue |
| Kom Ombo — Double Temple | ~175 km south (3 hrs) | ~450 EGP + 100 museum — included | Double symmetrical plan · Nile bank position · mummified crocodile museum |
Two Options: Day Trip or One-Way to Aswan
Return to Luxor: Visit Edfu and Kom Ombo and return to Luxor — a full day, departing 06:30, returning by 18:00.
One-way to Aswan: Continue after Kom Ombo to Aswan (45 min further south) — ideal for visitors who have a night in Aswan planned. Egypt For Travel arranges the one-way transfer with Aswan hotel drop-off.
| Duration: Full Day (10 hrs) | Type: Privet Tour | Run: Everyday |
Included
- Private licensed Egyptologist guide
- Private air-conditioned vehicle throughout
- Horse carriage to Edfu Temple (from town car park)
- Edfu Temple entrance (~600 EGP)
- Kom Ombo Temple entrance (~450 EGP)
- Lunch at a recommended restaurant en route
- Bottled water throughout · all taxes and service charges
Excluded
- One-way to Aswan (additional transfer cost — contact us)
- Alcoholic beverages · personal spending · tips
Itinerary:
06:30 — Hotel/cruise pickup in Luxor
08:30 — Arrive Edfu · horse carriage to temple
08:45–10:15 — Edfu Temple of Horus · hypostyle hall · sanctuary · Horus statue · Festival reliefs
10:15 — Continue to Kom Ombo (45 min drive)
11:00–12:00 — Lunch at Kom Ombo Nile-view restaurant
12:00–13:30 — Kom Ombo Temple · both sanctuaries · medical instruments wall · Crocodile Museum
13:30 — Return to Luxor (OR continue to Aswan)
16:00–17:00 — Arrive Luxor / Aswan
Prices:
Prices
Notes:
Prices Policy
All prices per person. Private available at a premium for groups wanting exclusive use — contact Egypt For Travel for pricing. Weather cancellations receive a full rescheduling without penalty.
Departure Tips
Early departure essential — the drives are long. The horse carriage at Edfu is traditional and included — do not tip the driver before the ride or you may be taken somewhere other than the temple.
Payment Policy
25% deposit to confirm booking. Peak season (October–April): 50% deposit. The slot must be confirmed well in advance during peak season.
Installment Policy
Installments available for groups. Contact Egypt For Travel via WhatsApp (+20 155 555 2466).
Tipping Guide
Customary $5–10 per person, paid directly to the crew after the post-landing celebration. Boat captain: 20–50 EGP. Driver: $5–8 per day.
Cancellation Policy
61+ days: 10% · 31–60 days: 20% · 15–30 days: 50% · 1–14 days: 100%. Weather cancellations are rescheduled without charge — this is not a standard cancellation.